| Literature DB >> 31164562 |
Monali Naik1, Pratush Brahma2, Manjusha Dixit3.
Abstract
The chick chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) is an extra-embryonic membrane, comprised of a high density of blood and lymphatic vessels. CAM has a dense capillary network and is commonly used to study in vivo angiogenesis and anti-angiogenesis in response to potential biomolecules and drugs. Most of the earlier reported CAM assays described the in-ovo method-where the viability of the embryo is higher, but accessibility to the CAM is limited. Ex-ovo CAM methods were previously described that employed shell-less cultures of chick embryos, but the low viability of embryos reduced the overall robustness of the angiogenesis assays. We described a method (named as cup-CAM method) which is more economical, has better accessibility and has significantly improved the viability of the embryo till advanced developmental stages. We could perform this simple yet useful experimentation with the common tools available in the laboratory. We successfully used the cup-CAM method for showing the paracrine effects of conditioned media from tumor cells, on the angiogenesis. This method can be used to assay the angiogenic potential of a drug or protein and to observe the embryonic development of the chick embryo and other related scientific applications.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; cost-effective CAM; cup-CAM; efficient CAM; ex-ovo CAM
Year: 2018 PMID: 31164562 PMCID: PMC6526448 DOI: 10.3390/mps1020019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Methods Protoc ISSN: 2409-9279
Figure 1Representative images of chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) variants. (A) in-ovo setup by windowing method on day of incubation; (B) ex-ovo setup in a Petri plate; (C) ex-ovo setup in a glass-vertical view; (D) ex-ovo setup in a glass-horizontal view; (E) ex-ovo setup on plastic cups, image taken by a Camera and; (F) ex-ovo setup in plastic cups, image taken by a Chemidoc (Charge-coupled device (CCD) Camera).
Figure 2Method overview of the cup–CAM method. After three days from fertilization, incubated chicken eggs were obtained and whole egg content transferred to plastic cups for further incubation. We carried out incubation inoculation of the CAM on the seventh day. On the 13th day, imaging was carried out using a stereomicroscope and a Chemidoc camera.
Figure 3Overview of the CAM assay angiogenesis analysis. The images of the CAM were processed and analyzed by manual counting of the vessels arising from the disc, followed by statistical analysis.
Figure 4Survivability of various CAM assay techniques. Compared to Petri dishes, weighing paper boats and glasses, ex-ovo cultures in plastic cups gives higher embryo survivability rate. The in-ovo and ex-ovo (plastic cups) show relatively the same survivability.
The comparative attributes of various CAM Assay methodologies.
| CAM Assay Methods | Attributes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No of Eggs Experimented | Accessibility | Embryo Viability | Overall Efficiency | |
|
| 30 | Low | 85–95% | Low * |
|
| 15 (Petri Dishes) | High | 15–25% | Low * |
|
| 30 | High | 45–55% | Medium * |
|
| 462 | High | 85–95% | High * |
* 1. Low accessibility + 5–95% Embryo viability = Low efficiency; 2. High accessibility + 5–30% Embryo viability = Low efficiency; 3. High accessibility + 40–70% Embryo viability = Medium efficiency; 4. High accessibility + 70–95% Embryo viability = High efficiency; Embryo viability range = 5–95%.